About Me

Thanks for stopping by and taking a look around. I've loved photography for a long time. When I was dating my wife Sylvia, I bought a manual Canon T-60 camera with some kind of kit lens. I had no clue what I was doing. The salesman started telling me about aperture and shutter speed and I had no idea what he was talking about.

I just started making some photographs. I devoured copies of Popular Photography and educated myself with books from Ansel Adams. I found that photography came to me naturally. I could "see" things through a lens that others couldn't.

I had to take a break from the world of SLR photography in 1998. It was time for my wife and I to raise a family which included my son Michael and daughter Ally. It would be 10 years before I was able to purchase another SLR. By this time, the digital revolution had taken hold. While it was still like riding a bike to learn new controls and terms, it took awhile to get that vision that I had. So I shot for nearly 2 years before deciding to turn it into a business.

After living in New York for my first 8 years, I spent the next 19 years in New Jersey. Circumstances brought us to Florida for 14 years and now we have settled in the Atlanta area of Georgia. I love it and hope to spend a long time here as an Atlanta photographer.

God has blessed me with the gift of creativity. So I want to use that to help tell your story. If you have any questions at all, please feel free to call me any time at 678-310-9172

Thursday, June 14, 2012

John Saddington aka Tentblogger

If you have any interesting blogging and doing it successfully, then you need to be reading John Saddington‘s work. He’s been blogging for about a decade and he has written a number of posts designed to help you out.

The question keeps getting asked: “Is blogging dead?” The answer is no. Bad blogging is dead. To have success, it takes work. John can help you out. Recently, he help a meetup at The Work Spot in downtown Duluth to go over some principles about taking blogging to a higher level. It was a good time. Here are some of the images of John in his element. I may give him honorary Italian status considering his penchant for using his hands quite a bit when communicating.